SimplifyLocal

No demo environment. No mockups.

See it working on a real business.

Alpha Pressure Washing in Atlanta runs their marketing on SimplifyLocal. Everything linked below is their live website: real jobs their crew finished, turned into pages a homeowner can find. Click anything. Check everything.

Follow one job from the truck to Google.

A real crew finished a real job.

A house and porch wash in Canton, GA, about an hour on site. The crew closed out the job in their scheduling software the way they close out every job, photos attached. That’s the entire input. Nobody wrote a brief, opened a CMS, or thought about marketing.

The job became this page.

Read it on their website → Notice what’s on it: what the crew actually found (algae worked into the deck boards, oxidation film on the window trim), how they treated it, and the before-and-after photos they took. It reads like someone who was there, because the details came from someone who was there. The owner approved it before it went live.

It joined a portfolio that grows with the work.

Browse the full portfolio → Every page lives at alphapressurewash.com: their domain, their URLs, their rankings to keep. When we wrote this, the portfolio covered jobs across four Georgia cities. It gets bigger every time the crew works, without anyone doing anything extra.

Built so Google can read every word of it.

View the source on any of those pages: structured data describing the business, the service, the location, and the photo gallery, plus sitemaps wired into Google Search Console. That’s the unglamorous plumbing that turns a job your crew already did into something a homeowner three suburbs over can find.

Been burned before? Good. Bring that skepticism.

Things worth checking while you’re on their site:

Does it read like AI slop?

Generated pages usually smell generic. These are built from the job ticket, so the street-level details either ring true or they don't. Judge for yourself.

Are the photos stock?

Every image is one the crew took on site. Before-and-afters, taken on a phone, in Georgia humidity.

Whose domain is it on?

alphapressurewash.com. Not a subdomain we control, not a widget embedded on their site. If they fired us tomorrow, the pages are still theirs.

Could an agency have made this?

Sure, at $1,500 a month, one page at a time, after a kickoff call. Here it happens automatically every time a job closes, and the owner spends about 30 seconds approving each one.

Full disclosure

Alpha Pressure Washing is our first customer, and our founder helps run their marketing. That’s exactly why we can show you everything instead of a polished case study.

Their account is the same product every customer gets: same integration, same review queue, same publishing. As more customers’ results mature, they’ll be shown here too.

Want this running on your website?

Book a 30-minute walkthrough and we’ll look at your service area, your scheduling software, and what your first pages would look like.